Crypto Tax Bills Face Democratic Objections at House Committee Hearing
Key Takeaways
- The hearing exposed Democratic resistance to a deferral provision that would allow miners and stakers to postpone income tax on newly minted coins until sale.
- Industry representatives including Coinbase and Anchorage Digital used the hearing to press for legislative action, arguing the current tax code creates widespread confusion for millions of American crypto owners.
- The bills face a narrow legislative window, with no parallel Senate legislation advanced to a floor vote and both chambers needing to pass matching legislation before the congressional session ends in late 2026.
A package of crypto tax bills faces unresolved questions after a U.S. House Ways and Means Committee hearing exposed objections from lawmakers, particularly Democrats, over proposed tax treatments for mined and staked digital assets. Chairman Jason Smith called for bipartisan progress, but ranking Democrat Richard Neal did not endorse the bills as written.
Committee Democrats Raise Concerns Over Mining and Staking Deferral Provisions
The provision drawing the sharpest scrutiny would allow miners and stakers to defer income tax on newly minted coins until the assets are sold. Mike Kaercher, deputy director of the Tax Law Center at NYU Law and a hearing witness, argued the election creates a new tax subsidy and conflicts with established tax principles.
“The problem is that the bill then provides an election for stakers and miners to defer income paid in the form of newly minted coins until disposition,” he said. “It violates parity with traditional finance and the principle that income is taxed on receipt.”
Kaercher added that existing guardrails in the bill may be insufficient. “Despite some thoughtful guardrails in the bill, it may be possible for taxpayers to permanently escape tax by earning rewards through certain business structures,” he said. That argument drew attention from committee Democrats, who raised concerns about whether the deferral mechanism could be exploited.
Bills Would Exempt Small Transactions and Eliminate Double Taxation on Mining Proceeds
The seven bills address a range of tax treatment issues raised by the crypto industry. One bill would exempt small transactions with minimal gains from tax reporting requirements. Another bill would address the double-taxation scenario that currently applies to mining and staking proceeds, which are taxed both upon receipt and again upon sale.
“If Americans want to pay with a stablecoin instead of a credit card or cash, they should be able to without a pile of tax paperwork,” Smith said during the hearing.
He described the broader legislative goal as addressing gaps in the tax code, including parity with traditional financial assets, clarity for situations unique to digital assets, and reduced paperwork for owners and brokers.
Legislative Path Remains Unclear With Congressional Session Nearing Its End
The hearing represents an early procedural step that would typically be followed by revisions and a markup before any bill could advance to a full House vote. Whether the bills can advance through markup, a full House vote, and Senate consideration before the congressional session ends in late 2026 remains unclear.
The Senate has not advanced parallel crypto tax legislation. Senator Cynthia Lummis has introduced similar bills in the upper chamber, though none have advanced to a floor vote. Both chambers would need to pass legislation before it could become law.
Industry Groups and IRS Workload Add Pressure for Legislative Resolution
Industry representatives used the hearing to press for action. Coinbase vice president of tax Lawrence Zlatkin said the current tax code creates widespread compliance problems.
“Millions of Americans own or use digital assets, yet much of the tax code still treats this technology as though it were a niche experiment rather than a growing part of the financial system,” he said. “The result has been confusion for taxpayers, compliance challenges for businesses and unnecessary burdens for the IRS.”
Anchorage Digital’s head of policy, Kevin Wysocki, wrote on X that regulatory and tax clarity need to advance together. The IRS, which has absorbed a new crypto tax-reporting regime this year and reduced its workforce under President Donald Trump’s administration, faces an increasing volume of crypto filings under existing rules.